Andrew Simpson
Stories, people and events
Tuesday, 23 December 2025
Robin .... A Christmas Annual from the Hulton Press, in 1953
Shopping for Christmas ..... with T.C. Whitaker on Beech Road
It is the shop of Thomas Charles Whittaker at the bottom of Beech Road where it curves round into the Green.
And for me the attractions are many. First we have a date, secondly it is possible to identify three of the four people in the picture and lastly there is that wonderful detail of all that the shop had to offer.
The date is 1906 and judging by the adverts for “CHOICE NEW CURRANTS AND SULTANAS [for] XMAS”and the boxes of Mincemeat we must be in late November or December.*
Standing in front of the shop by the open door in Thomas who was 40 years old when the picture was taken and to his right is his son “Charlie” and away in the corner is Mr Fox who the caption tells us was about to become the manager of the Stanley Grove shop.
Now it says something about the concentration of people around the green that old Thomas Whittaker could feel it made business sense to open another shop just round the corner and off the green, and later had another store I am told on Ivy Green Road.
But the captions and the photograph do not quite fit. If the date is indeed 1906 then the figure to the left of Thomas Whitaker cannot be his son Charlie who would have been just ten years old, and while the Fox family lived at 19 Stanley Grove there is no evidence that they were running a shop at any time between 1903 and 1911.
There was a grocery shop at number 2 but this was run by the Whitely family. Interestingly enough it was still a shop as late as 1972 and today while it is a residential property it is possible to see its origins as a shop.
So all of this points to a later date perhaps closer to the Great War or perhaps after 1918which would be more creditable given the appearance of Thomas and his son Charlie. So all that is needed is a trawl of the later street directories for Stanley Grove and the occupants of nu 2.
And I suspect that the Whittaker’s bought up the little grocery story sometime after 1911, by which time widow Whitely was 55.
Now I am in real danger of becoming boring and reducing the story to something like the medieval debate on how many angels could dance on a pin head.**
So instead I will return to those wonderful shop displays which have all the brash marketing of that famous slogan “pile them high and sell them cheap.” The windows are covered with products and adverts for products, ranging from fruit to biscuits and those great sides of meat hanging in the open while beside them over the door is an assortment of brushes.
All of which might allow Thomas to claim that from his shop there was all that the discerning shopper might want.
And of course there are all the household names that are still familiar from OXO and Crawfords, to Bovril and Skipper Sardines. I like even the carefully crafted descriptions either side of the family name announcing the shop as a place of “High class Provisions, Family Grocer and Italian Warehouseman”
It is not the only photograph in the collection and I must at a later date introduce another which will have been taken at the same time and shows Mr Rogers with the horse and cart. But that as they say is for another time.
Picture; from the Lloyd collection.
* There will be those Christmas experts who will point out that the date must be earlier in the year for no one serious about Christmas cakes and puddings would leave it till November to make them.
**Which apparently is really a piece of propaganda put about during the Reformation to discredit Catholic theology.
One canal …… 18 pictures ……. 45 or so years ago ..... walking the Rochdale in 1979
Most have appeared before but not together in the order in which I walked the canal back in 1979.
But given my memory and my total failure to make notes of each shot at the time I took them some may well be out of sync.
Back then the canal was still in a shabby state and despite the work of restoration there was still an air of decay, which was added to by the state of the buildings which stood along its path.
Many had seen better days, a few were derelict waiting for something to happen, and I since I walked the walk some have been demolished and some have been renovated.
The first stretch from Princess Street took in the power station, which had supplied steam to the neighbouring offices and warehouses, through pipes which ran the length of the canal.
Passing these pipes could be a tad unnerving as in places steam would escape from the joints, leaving you wondering if you would suddenly encounter a burst of scalding water.
The pipes have gone, the overgrown towpath has been cleaned up, and sections of the canal have been transformed, which rather makes the 18 pictures something special.
Although I am the first to admit the quality of some are iffy.
Location; The Rochdale Canal
Pictures; The Rochdale Canal, 1979, from the collection of Andrew Simpson
*One canal ….. 24 pictures ,walking the Rochdale Canal in 1979, https://chorltonhistory.blogspot.com/search/label/One%20canal%2018%20pictures
An unfamiliar view of Court Yard around 1900
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| Court Yard circa 1900 |
Many of his drawings appeared in the Kentish Times in 1930 and were reprinted in Old Eltham sixty-six years later.
He was a fine artist and draughtsman and some at least of the pictures will have been drawn from first hand knowledge others like this one were probably drawn from picture postcards and photographs taken at the turn of the last century.
Picture; Court Yard, Llwyd Roberts, circa 1929-30, from Old Eltham, 1966, courtesy of Margaret Copeland Gain
*Court Yard, http://chorltonhistory.blogspot.co.uk/2015/03/so-what-fate-for-crown-on-court-yard.html
**Annie Morris, http://chorltonhistory.blogspot.co.uk/search/label/Annie%20Morris
***Llwyd Roberts, http://chorltonhistory.blogspot.co.uk/search/label/Llwyd%20Roberts
The art of Christmas ………. part two
The second in the series featuring festive menus from Blackpool hotels covering the period from the late 1940s through to 1969.
I have always planned to use them in a series but always missed the boat of featuring them at Christmas, and running the stories in April seemed a bit daft.
What I particularly like about them is the artwork, which is a style I remember so well from the period.
And to the social historian or the nosey there is an insight into what the hotels offered over the holiday.
So from 1958, Redman’s Park House Hotel began Christmas Day with “Breakfast between 8.30 am to 9.15”.
After which guests could participate in “Snooker, Billiards and Table Tennis Competitions”.
Luncheon was at 1 pm with “The Queen’s Christmas Day Broadcast on Television and Sound Radio” at 3, followed by an appearance of Father Christmas at 3,30.
At 4 there was “Afternoon Tea and the Children’s Party” with the Christmas Banquet from 7 pm.
The evening was rounded off with “Games, Sing song and the Delta Variety Show” between 8.30 pm to 12.0 midnight, finishing with two hours of “Dancing with the Band”.
Location; Blackpool, 1948-1969
Pictures; from various hotels, 1947-1969, from the collection of Suzanne Morehead
Monday, 22 December 2025
The art of Christmas ………. part one
I am back with how hotels have celebrated Christmas in the past.
And so with that in mind I thought I would visit a series of festive menus from Blackpool hotels covering the period from the late 1940s through to 1969.
They come from the collection of Suzanne Morehead who kindly passed them over to me a few years ago.
I have planned to use them in a series, but always missed the boat of featuring them at Christmas, and running the stories in April seemed a bit daft.
So here over the next few days are a selection.
What I particularly like about them is the artwork, which is a style I remember so well from when I was growing up.
And for the social historian or the nosey, there is an insight into what the hotels offered over the holiday.
So from 1958, Redman’s Park House Hotel began Christmas Day with “Breakfast between 8.30 am to 9.15”.
After which guests could participate in “Snooker, Billiards and Table Tennis Competitions”.
Luncheon was at 1 pm with “The Queen’s Christmas Day Broadcast on Television and Sound Radio” at 3. followed by an appearance of Father Christmas at 3,30.
At 4, there was “Afternoon Tea and the Children’s Party” with the Christmas Banquet from 7 pm.
The evening was rounded off with “Games, Sing song and the Delta Variety Show” between 8.30 pm to 12.0 midnight, finishing with two hours of “Dancing with the Band”.
Location; Blackpool, 1948-1969
Pictures; from various hotels, 1947-1969, from the collection of Suzanne Morehead
Cleaning the brass and making the beds in Chorlton ........ with Miss Edith Ashworth
I wonder what Edith Ashworth made of Chorlton-cum-Hardy.
She had been born in Northenden in 1880, and lived with her father and mother and four siblings in a small cottage off Mill Lane. Her father described himself as a labourer, while her eldest sister was employed as a milliner.
Just opposite their home was the river and the mill, while just a few minutes’ walk to the east beyond Palatine Road were open fields stretching all the way to Sale.
By contrast Chorlton-cum-Hardy was undergoing one of those revolutions which would see large parts of the township transformed into rows of modest properties, catering for the “middling people”, many of whom worked in the city but wanted to live on the edge of the countryside.
Some were professionals, while others were managers and yet more worked as clerks, and secretaries. They rented their homes, but many still found money to employ a servant, which was always a mark of distinction.
And in the April of 1901 Edith was working as a general servant for Mrs. Eliza Jones, at 7 Maple Avenue.
Mrs. Jones employed only the one servant, who and these were often known as “maids of all work” because they pretty much did everything from the cooking and cleaning to turning down the beds and much more, which in the case of Maple Avenue involved looking after nine rooms along with the needs of Mrs. Jones and her two grown up children.
The family had moved into the house when it was built in 1895, and over the next century kept a unique photographic record of the house and the surrounding streets, allowing us to place Edith in the very rooms she cleaned and kept tidy.
Nor was she the only servant in the avenue. In total there were four servants working in four of the seven occupied houses. All were “maids of all the work”, and some catered for families much larger than at 7 Maple Avenue.
And like a century earlier when we were still a rural community, none of the four servants were local, three came from Cheshire and a fourth from Stretford. Some people might be surprised at this, but it was that simple rule, that if servants were local they might well take stories of the household home, and those stories might well become the gossip of the township.
Only in one respect was Edith different from her fellow servants and that was her age. She was 21, while Mary Ann Jones at number 15 was 18 years old and the remaining two were just 15.
Sadly, there is little more that I can find out about Edith, for like so many of her class, history has not been kind, and so far I have found only one other reference, but it is a tantalizing one, because on March 10th 1904 she sailed from Liverpool to Halifax in Canada on board the Tunisian. She shared the journey with her 17-year-old sister Florence, and while I know they arrived, the rest as they say awaits further research.
As for 7 Maple Avenue, it stayed in the possession of the family until 1997, and I am indebted to Ray Jones, who is one of the descendants, for permission to reproduce photographs of the house.
Loation; Chorlton-cum-Hardy
Pictures; 7 Maple Avenue, date unknown, courtesy of Ray Jones













